Retired Quasars source of high energy cosmic rays.

Discussion in 'Astronomy, Exobiology, & Cosmology' started by thed, Apr 23, 2002.

  1. thed IT Gopher Registered Senior Member

    Messages:
    1,105
    Bill Steigerwald
    Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, Md. April 21, 2002
    William.A.Steigerwald.1@gsfc.nasa.gov
    (Phone: 301/286-5017)

    RELEASE: 02-55

    RETIRED QUASARS LIVE ON TO GENERATE THE FASTEST, MOST ENERGETIC COSMIC
    RAYS

    They are old but not forgotten. Nearby "retired" quasar galaxies,
    billions of years past their glory days as the brightest beacons in the
    Universe, may be the current source of rare, high-energy cosmic rays,
    the fastest-moving bits of matter known and whose origin has been a
    long-standing mystery, according to scientists at NASA and Princeton
    University.

    The scientists have identified four elliptical galaxies that may have
    started this second career of cosmic-ray production, all located above
    the handle of the Big Dipper and visible with backyard telescopes.
    Each contains a central black hole of at least 100 million solar
    masses that, if spinning, could form a colossal battery sending atomic
    particles, like sparks, shooting off towards Earth at near light speed.

    These findings are discussed today in a press conference at the joint
    meeting of the American Physical Society and the High Energy
    Astrophysics Division of the American Astronomical Society in
    Albuquerque, N.M. The team includes Dr. Diego Torres of Princeton
    University and Drs. Elihu Boldt, Timothy Hamilton and Michael
    Loewenstein of NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Md.

    Quasar galaxies are thousands of times brighter than ordinary galaxies,
    fueled by a central black hole swallowing copious amounts of
    interstellar gas. In galaxies with so-called quasar remnants, the
    black hole nucleus is no longer a strong source of radiation.

    "Some quasar remnants might not be so lifeless after all, keeping busy
    in their later years," said Torres. "For the first time, we see the
    hint of a possible connection between the arrival directions of
    ultra-high energy cosmic rays and locations on the sky of nearby
    dormant galaxies hosting supermassive black holes."

    Ultra high-energy cosmic rays represent one of astrophysics' greatest
    mysteries. Each cosmic ray -- essentially a single sub-atomic particle
    such as a proton traveling just shy of light speed -- packs as much
    energy as a major league baseball pitch, over 40 million trillion
    electron volts. (The rest energy of a proton is about a billion
    electron volts.) The particles' source must be within 200 million
    light years of Earth, for cosmic rays from beyond this distance would
    lose energy as they traveled through the murk of the cosmic microwave
    radiation pervading the Universe. There is considerable uncertainty,
    however, over what kinds of objects within 200 million light years
    could generate such energetic particles.

    "The very fact that these four giant elliptical galaxies are apparently
    inactive makes them viable candidates for generating ultra high-energy
    cosmic rays," said Boldt. Drenching radiation from an active quasar
    would dampen cosmic-ray acceleration, sapping most of their energy,
    Boldt said.

    The team concedes it cannot determine if the black holes in these
    galaxies are spinning, a basic requirement for a compact dynamo to
    accelerate ultra-high energy cosmic rays. Yet scientists have confirmed
    the existence of at least one spinning supermassive black hole,
    announced in October 2001. The prevailing theory is that supermassive
    black holes spin up as they accrete matter, absorbing orbital energy
    from the infalling matter.

    Ultra-high-energy cosmic rays are detected by ground-based
    observatories, such as the Akeno Giant Air Shower Array near Yamanashi,
    Japan. They are extremely rare, striking the Earth's atmosphere at a
    rate about one per square kilometer per decade. Construction is
    underway for the Auger Observatory, which will cover 3,000 square
    kilometers (1,160 square miles) on an elevated plain in western
    Argentina. A proposed NASA mission called OWL (Orbiting Wide-angle
    Light-collectors) would detect the highest-energy cosmic rays by
    looking down on the atmosphere from space.

    Loewenstein joins NASA Goddard's Laboratory for High Energy
    Astrophysics as a research associate with the University of Maryland,
    College Park. Hamilton, also a member of the Lab, is a National
    Research Council fellow.

    For images of the "retired" quasar galaxies, refer to:
    http://universe.gsfc.nasa.gov/press/images/cosmic_ray/
     

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